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Economics - Science or Religion?

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 05:48:41

[quote=""Z]The subject of the thread is whether economics is a science or a religion. I would like to point that my discussion with Jaws demonstrates that at least some people are real zealots of an economic theory and are quite impervious to facts, wholy to the whorship of their simple solution. The same could be said of communists for example.

QED[/quote]

True enough. Will just have to steer clear of these discussions in the future. Thanks.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby Doly » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 05:52:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')One of the reasons a free market will not completely function on its own is short term gains versus long term costs. Once I control a resource, I can maximize my gains in the short term for my own benefit, while imposing costs on society which may over the long term outweigh any personal benefit that I received. Another reason is the tragedy of the commons. Where resources are shared and not owned by anyone.


I have been wondering if there is any way of introducing some "automatic wisdom" in the market. For example, a lot of short-term versus long-term issues, and also tragedy of the commons issues, arise from overproduction. If a company can make profit by selling more widgets, regardless of the facts that widgets are useless things with only fashion value, they will. If there was some automatic constraint on overproducing, that would help. Of course, I'm not sure how that could be implemented.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby rogerhb » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 06:07:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', 'I') have been wondering if there is any way of introducing some "automatic wisdom" in the market.


No, we're crap, we discount the future because of the short term nature of our thinking.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 06:51:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')One of the reasons a free market will not completely function on its own is short term gains versus long term costs. Once I control a resource, I can maximize my gains in the short term for my own benefit, while imposing costs on society which may over the long term outweigh any personal benefit that I received. Another reason is the tragedy of the commons. Where resources are shared and not owned by anyone.


I have been wondering if there is any way of introducing some "automatic wisdom" in the market. For example, a lot of short-term versus long-term issues, and also tragedy of the commons issues, arise from overproduction. If a company can make profit by selling more widgets, regardless of the facts that widgets are useless things with only fashion value, they will. If there was some automatic constraint on overproducing, that would help. Of course, I'm not sure how that could be implemented.



It may be better for a growing city to grow vertically to take advantage of the efficiencies of public transport than to allow sprawl horizontally and have to build a decentralized transport system of roads and private automobiles, but so long as developers can make money by buying farmland and building houses cities will continue to grow out instead of up regardless of the long-term costs.

And the farmer who earns $100.000 a year from that land who can sell it today for $10 million would be foolish not to sell it. Disregarding opportunity costs and the time value of money, he would have to work 100 years to recoup that gain from farming versus selling. If they city grows up around him, his taxes may increase so that production no longer covers his taxes, and in any case he may be forced to sell by the city who can annex his land to increase the size of the city.

But clearly taking land out of production has a long term cost to society that may not be reflected in those transactions. Farmland may be a straight forward comparison, but society has other needs as well.

If a hotel buys the right to develop directly on the beachfront they may block public access to the beach which generally is a public right. This may reduce the value of surrounding areas if the beach is fragmented by development and there is not a contiguous path along the beach for public use and access to the water which is publicy owned.

Limassol has about 13-14 kms of paths along the beach which are only interupted by a series of apartments along a 2-3 km stretch because those hotels were built in the 70's without regard for public access to the beach. Never the less, total enjoyment of the beach areas is dminished by this break in public access, and once those hotels are in the way, this cost is imposed impertuity regardless of the compensation paid or received at the time they were built. Does a cost imposed impertuity on the public justify a hotel building 25 meters closer to the water's edge than they would normally be allowed? That 25 meters has a higher economic value if it is not developed than if it is.

Look along the Thames River in London and you will see similar economic costs imposed on the public due to historical abberitions that now impede development of the commons.

If left only to the free market, Central Park or St. James Park could be paved over for housing and commercial real-estate. Clearly this is not in the public's best interest. We need greenbelts along waterways to protect the quality of our water and to provide for multiple use recreation. These actually increase the value of adjoining properties than if they did not exist for the public's use.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby Liamj » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 08:22:13

The central reason there are all these failures of the market is the failure of currency and/or its pricing, most often over time. The price put on the continuous beach was too low because nobody counted the opportunity cost to the v.high number of ppl eventually affected. Ecotaxes of water or carbon attempt to tip the scales one way, but do not enough to change the underlying assumption that there is always more. I still think they're a good idea, as is staunching a gunshot wound, but believe it or not, we've got bigger fish to fry.

I'm more interested in the substance of the currency, and Mr Bills excellent list on good governance and financial reform back on pg4. As said then i think its a good list, with the exception of its assumption that there is the carrying capacity within the biosphere for the ever expanding human economy. We're still using politics to tinker with prices with v.little idea of the stock of real wealth out there.

If we could admit to ourselves that entropy was real and we were heat machines (ie. that physics works),
-and had some idea of our real wealth - mineral & energy deposits & flows, perched or running water, productive agricultural & natural systems, tools (broadly defined), information (somewhat ala H.T.Odum)
-and could assemble these diff types of wealth into local carrying capacity models,
..then we could back our currency with spare-able (from ecosystem services) real wealth.

And only then might economics not over run the resource base. Until we not only recognise that there are limits but have a pretty sharp idea of what those limits are and combust accordingly, better governance and fiscal reform will only help, not save us.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 09:07:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd only then might economics not over run the resource base. Until we not only recognise that there are limits but have a pretty sharp idea of what those limits are and combust accordingly, better governance and fiscal reform will only help, not save us.



It is hard to quantify the carrying capacity of any given system if the parameters of that system are unknown or constantly changing? For example, in order to know the correct carrying capacity of the earth, we have to know how many people are going to make demands on it? The science of economics attempts to match limited resources with unlimited demand or at least demand that is increasing.

There is nothing in economic theory that states we have to have more and more. Economics also works in reverse. The economics of less and less. By the way, this also applies to finance and the present value of money versus the future value of money. The assumptions work in both ways, with inflation and with deflation. You just use different deflators or discount rates. As you decrease the discount rate or even make it go negative it makes current debt more expensive in absolute terms.

This is probably what bothers me the most. People tell me a system does not work without understanding how it does work. They then propose alternatives, which are actually just duplicating what the original system already does, but less efficiently.

In economics you substitute labor for capital and vice versa. So you do not need a separate currency for resources, for land, for labor, for intellectual property, you just have to price goods & services properly. That includes the full cost of their recovery and the full cost of their disposal or recycling. What economics will not do is eliminate the problem of people turning 'free goods' that is air, water, mines, minerals and other natural resources that they find for free into wealth. By definition anything that is free invites over exploitation. And if it is a non-renewable resource then you will quickly run out of it unless you start raising the price to take into consideration that it is a finite resource.

And you do not need scrypt for unproductive work. You just have to price unproductive work cheaper relative to productive labor. Intellectual property is work. You exchange your creative energies for goods & services. It is just like prostitution. It is just easier to steal intellectual property than get one in for free.

Or other assets with a finite time value like airline tickets. Yes, there is a cost to fly that airplane even if that seat may have a variable cost depending on availability.


So once again, if you want less economic activity - less consumption, less energy used, less waste, etc. - then you have to tax usage through higher prices, higher discount rates, higher consumption taxes, higher recyling fees, higher user fees.... Get it? In order to bring demand down to match supply, you need higher real prices, not higher nominal prices. How many ways can I say it? If you cannot understand that then you are not in a position to start replacing our current models with another system whose outcomes you can also not understand.

So, that is it. Either you get it by now, or I am wasting my time.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby MrBean » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 11:42:59

I just came by a definition of the law governing the functioning of capital (I'm very much a beginner in Marxist economics), which by the look of it seems to have lot's of empirical support, which MrBill can perhaps confirm:

Principle of maximation of profit means that capitalistic productive units which fall under the averadge profitability dont survive (even though they may be profitable).

There are many consequenses of this, most notably the strong or absolute tendency towards monopolism and corporatocracy in unfettered capitalism. And as small and medium size businesses loose to bigger ones and vanish, the entrepriser and self-employed part of population ("bourgeoisie") become (private sector) wage-earners in increasing numbers, few fat cat CEOs and other lavishly paid professionals and many into the social class now often called precariate (without a secure job), increasing the economic and social inequality, which in turn destroys social cohesion and communal spirit.

Principle of maximation of profit means also, as I'm sure has been noted here, that a capitalistic unit like corporation needs to externalise social and enviromental costs as much as it can, in order to survive in the competition against other capitalistic units. Legal persons called corporations can thus be accurately described as sociopaths.

Social democratic (bloody revisionists! :)) project (New Deal etc.) of trying to put some political restrictions to the functionings of capital has had it's successes, but seems to have been able only to delay the inevitable monopolization, as the social democratic or "progressive" forces are now often even more eager and especially better able to privatize formerly collectively built and owned means of production and resources than various "conservative" forces.

So the conclusion I draw from all of this is that enviromentally and socially sound economics should start from banning corporations as business forms and thus also stock-markets and private banks (the most abstract and most capitalistic structures) and market mechanisms in production should be restricted to such entrepreneal forms as small family businesses, co-operatives etc. Which happens to be - not surprisingly - very close to the Cuban economic model. In this model MrBill would loose his current job, but I'm sure he would be able to find even more satisfactory and meaningfull things to do than playing in the casino, and perhaps also more time... :)
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby jaws » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 13:10:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Z', 'T')he subject of the thread is whether economics is a science or a religion. I would like to point that my discussion with Jaws demonstrates that at least some people are real zealots of an economic theory and are quite impervious to facts, wholy to the whorship of their simple solution. The same could be said of communists for example.

The same can be said about anti-economics. It's just a cult founded on the denial of a science of economics, just like anti-darwinians put their cult before scientific conclusions. When hard evidence is provided that confirms the findings of economics, such as the debacle of New Orleans, the anti-economics crowd is strangely mute.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby jaws » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 13:12:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', 'N')o, we're crap, we discount the future because of the short term nature of our thinking.
If we did not discount the future, we would always save everything and never consume anything. Thus we would all starve to death while accumulating future resources. Not discounting the future is therefore extremely unsustainable.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby rogerhb » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 13:32:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'N')ot discounting the future is therefore extremely unsustainable.


There is a world of difference between

(a) planning your planting, harvesting and storage of grain

(b) beggering your grandchildren by racking up unpayable debts and assuming they would prefer the internet over fuel in the future.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 13:46:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBean', 'I') just came by a definition of the law governing the functioning of capital (I'm very much a beginner in Marxist economics), which by the look of it seems to have lot's of empirical support, which MrBill can perhaps confirm:

Principle of maximation of profit means that capitalistic productive units which fall under the averadge profitability dont survive (even though they may be profitable).

In this model MrBill would loose his current job, but I'm sure he would be able to find even more satisfactory and meaningfull things to do than playing in the casino, and perhaps also more time... :)


Profit maximization means that each firm may have a profit maximizing strategy such as internal rates of return, but there is no guarantee that they will meet them with any, some or all of their pojects. More projects are launched on optomistic assumptions than eventually bear fruit.

It is a process of creative destruction. Some projects go by the wayside while other new projects receive more resources within a firm.

Also we tend to work either at what were allowed to work at, what we're good at, or what we're used to. It is very hard to change horse mid-course. If you are in a sunset industry you better hope it can reinvent itself. Or as I have often said, "I would rather be mediocre in a good firm than good in a mediocre firm. "






Employees and like companies tend to move to the next best alternative. That is why there is not a tendency towards monopolies and oligopolies. Because many firms compete with one another and it is very hard to outperform your peers or the markets for long and regression to the mean sets in. Also, if you are in the knowledge business, your talent walks out the door every evening and you can only hope they come back to work the next day.

So, having lived in communist countries and seen the damage of socialism, I am not so keen on that particular economic model and the waste of human talent it created. Thank goodness some of those countries are springing back to life breeding hope in their future again.
Last edited by MrBill on Thu 02 Mar 2006, 09:06:20, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby MrBean » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 15:53:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Profit maximization means that each firm may have a profit maximizing strategy such as internal rates of return, but there is no guarantee that they will meet them with any, some or all of their pojects. More projects are launched on optomistic assumptions than eventually bear fruit.

It is a process of creative destruction. Some projects go by the wayside while other new projects receive more resources within a firm.

Also we tend to work either at what were allowed to work at, what we're good at, or what we're used to. It is very hard to change horse mid-course. If you are in a sunset industry you better hope it can reinvent itself. Or as I have often said, "I would rather be mediocre in a good firm than good in a mediocre firm. "

I have lost my job through mergers & shutting down of office and moving to new offices. I have moved approximately 20-times in my working career. That is 10 countries and 20 different cities. Sometimes within the same firm, sometimes leaving the firm. Banking in case you may have noticed has experienced a lot of contraction and consolidation in the past 15-years.

Plus when you are in emerging markets one of two things generally happens. Either the market develops and it is no longer an emerging market. Or it blows up and everyone connected with it loses their money, their job or both. Fortunately, they cannot take your experience and contacts away, so you can start again.

As for my current job, my future job, or my plans. I am not too bothered. I will be gainfully employed somewhere, and if not, I have my own businesses. Trading is a tough way to make a living in any case. You're only as good as your last trade. There are easier ways to make money for sure. I started out cleaning toilets, cleaning bricks and cleaning up at construction sites. No job is too menial for me. There is always satisfaction in a job well done. I am quite happy to go back to the farm or work as a carpenter (not in winter mind you), but this happens to pay better at the moment and it does not preclude pursuing my hobbies at a later date.

Employees and like companies tend to move to the next best alternative. That is why there is not a tendency towards monopolies and oligopolies. Because many firms compete with one another and it is very hard to outperform your peers or the markets for long and regression to the mean sets in. Also, if you are in the knowledge business, your talent walks out the door every evening and you can only hope they come back to work the next day.

So, having lived in communist countries and seen the damage of socialism, I am not so keen on that particular economic model and the waste of human talent it created. Thank goodness some of those countries are springing back to life breeding hope in their future again. I am happy to have been there to witness it happen and to help where I could. And you cannot take that away from me either. ; - )


OK, enough about you! :D

What about economics? Your argument that "tendency to move to the next best alternative" stops mono- and oligopolies from forming does not sound convincing, in fact it does not even sound comprehensible.

The way I see it, as long as there is room for expansion for capital and new markets to be conquered, this may alleviate the overall monopolistic tendency, which I'm sure you'll admit is fought against mainly and most effectively through political means, legislation, though lately the legislation seems giving into the tendency, e.g. allowing even further oligopolistic concentration of media corporations and inability to break the monopoly of MS, which has no serious capitalistic competitors. But when there is little or no room for expansion left, it seems reasonable to assume that the monopolistic tendency changes gear.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby jaws » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 20:16:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', 'T')here is a world of difference between

(a) planning your planting, harvesting and storage of grain

(b) beggering your grandchildren by racking up unpayable debts and assuming they would prefer the internet over fuel in the future.

Of course there is, but everyone has a different opinion about where the line is drawn. The market rate of interest, if left free of government intervention, will balance out everyone's time-preference rate and lead to an accumulation of wealth.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby jaws » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 20:58:51

Demand growing also implies future demand growing, something which resource owners will take into account. If the price of oil today shoots up to 300$ a barrel and I expect it will keep going up, I won't increase my production. In fact I will probably diminish it in anticipation of even higher prices.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby rogerhb » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 20:59:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'I')n fact I will probably diminish it in anticipation of even higher prices.


At which point the US invades.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby jaws » Tue 28 Feb 2006, 21:09:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', 'A')t which point the US invades.

And now you know why I'm so uncompromisingly opposed to that.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 01 Mar 2006, 03:43:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')K, enough about you! :D

What about economics? Your argument that "tendency to move to the next best alternative" stops mono- and oligopolies from forming does not sound convincing, in fact it does not even sound comprehensible.

The way I see it, as long as there is room for expansion for capital and new markets to be conquered, this may alleviate the overall monopolistic tendency, which I'm sure you'll admit is fought against mainly and most effectively through political means, legislation, though lately the legislation seems giving into the tendency, e.g. allowing even further oligopolistic concentration of media corporations and inability to break the monopoly of MS, which has no serious capitalistic competitors. But when there is little or no room for expansion left, it seems reasonable to assume that the monopolistic tendency changes gear.




I am sorry that simple concepts are incomprehensible for you. I will use smaller words.

Microsoft performed a vital service when it introduced existing technologies and gave consumers what they wanted, plug & play solutions that were user friendly and allowed a common standard. That is not a defense of any of Microsoft's anti-competitive practices, which have been addressed in the courts, but to say that Microsoft has no competitors is not true.

Secondly the productivity gains from Microsoft Windows were fantastic. Imagine having to compose a letter, send it to a secretary to type, read her typing to make sure it is correct, make changes, send it back to be re-typed, etc.? Now each worker has their own PC and the freedom to receive and send information to almost anyone at will. Trading. Less backoffice. All automatic. I deal over an electronic platform and it goes straight through to the backoffice system for processing. No hands on input and room for error. Etc. Etc. Etc. All based on Windows technology. All user friendly. Not only efficient, but empowering to say the least. The last thing I want now is to go back to a Unix based system and have to rely on IT guys to come fix my problems.

Thirdly, I have access to worldwide media content via the internet and satelite. I am spoiled for choice. I can watch CCTV or read Aljazeera.com. As I get English, French, German, Italian, Spanish and Russian programming via satelite, I have no interest to watch either CNN or CNBC for my coverage of world events. Not only do I receive more information than I can process (57-headlines from MarketWatch delivered to my mailbox yesterday alone), but a lot of it is free. The Economist (owned by Pierson Group who own the FT and are a UK firm) is about the only subscription I actually pay for these days. Ditto for news sites on the Internet. The only thing I pay for now is live data from Reuters and Bloomberg. Whom am I to question the providers business plans or their business logic? If they can provide it for free, I will gladly use it.

So if you talk about media concentration, you have to look beyond national borders and single media outlets.

But why bother, you love your socialism and its ideals, so there is not much point of trying to convince you of the value of any of this. Capitalism is a label. It does not really describe the economic model which we live under. More like a market based economy with a broad social contract including wealth transfers and proportional income taxes and a great deal of interference from the state with built in inefficiencies and unintended consequences. It is not just a mixed economy, but a messed up economy.
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby rogerhb » Wed 01 Mar 2006, 03:59:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'S')econdly the productivity gains from Microsoft Windows were fantastic. Imagine having to compose a letter, send it to a secretary to type, read her typing to make sure it is correct, make changes, send it back to be re-typed, etc.? Now each worker has their own PC and the freedom to receive and send information to almost anyone at will. Trading. Less backoffice. All automatic. I deal over an electronic platform and it goes straight through to the backoffice system for processing. No hands on input and room for error. Etc. Etc. Etc. All based on Windows technology. All user friendly. Not only efficient, but empowering to say the least. The last thing I want now is to go back to a Unix based system and have to rely on IT guys to come fix my problems.


Your knowledge of the computer industry history matches my knowledge of trading derivatives and shorting. :)
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Re: Economics - Science or Religion?

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 01 Mar 2006, 06:36:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rogerhb', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'S')econdly the productivity gains from Microsoft Windows were fantastic. Imagine having to compose a letter, send it to a secretary to type, read her typing to make sure it is correct, make changes, send it back to be re-typed, etc.? Now each worker has their own PC and the freedom to receive and send information to almost anyone at will. Trading. Less backoffice. All automatic. I deal over an electronic platform and it goes straight through to the backoffice system for processing. No hands on input and room for error. Etc. Etc. Etc. All based on Windows technology. All user friendly. Not only efficient, but empowering to say the least. The last thing I want now is to go back to a Unix based system and have to rely on IT guys to come fix my problems.


Your knowledge of the computer industry history matches my knowledge of trading derivatives and shorting. :)



Fair enough, but I started trading futures & options before I had Excel spreadsheets and other nifty software to help me. Thank God the personal PC revolution came along and put all that computing power into users hands. I cannot imagine going back to screen based mainframes anymore where you had to memorize commands like on our old Sunmicro workstations. We used to have to send orders to the pit via an operator.

I think that is the point. Even my mother has a basic grasp on using a PC these days. I am not an expert on the history of computers or a programmer and Window based applications have opened up a whole new world of possibilities for me as well as been an incredible productivity gain.

Some would have an economy in which the government calls all the shots because they are more afraid of companies making profits than missing out on innovation, which is the key to improving efficiency and therefore making the most out of the resources we have. That is just perverse. Talk about eating the egg of the goose that would have laid golden eggs.

Unfortunately, my time on peak oil is eroding those productivity gains, so will have to sign-off now.
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